BRITT-MARIE WAS HERE (2015)
By Fredrik Backman
Atria Books, 324 pp.
* * * ½
Let's see, a sometimes-cranky central character with OCD who
is often unintentionally funny. Swedish author Fredrik Backman is on dangerous
turf here; His titular figure in Britt-Marie
Was Here is, in many ways, Ove in drag, the latter being the protagonist of
his sensational debut A Man Called Ove.
I almost set aside Britt-Marie, but
luckily I persevered, as Backman imagines enough side journeys to avoid
self-plagiarism.
Britt-Marie takes the biggest journey–away from her
regimented suburban routine to the chaotic small town of Borg. Borg is a
fictional place that we infer is an hour or so from Stockholm, but you know its
type. Borg is a nowhere used-to-be town on the road to somewhere else. Backman
describes it thus: "One remarkable thing about communities built along
roads is that you can find just as many reasons for leaving them as excuses to
stay. Some people never quite stop devoting themselves to one or the
other." Think a cross between a town and a village that got kicked in the
teeth by late 20th century deindustrialization and then in the gut
by the 21st century financial crisis. Even if you live in Borg—a
word from Old Norse that translates as stronghold, but also as credit—you know
better than to bet dwindling resources on a future recovery. Credit is exactly how
many locals survive in Borg. The main business is the local pizzeria, which is
akin to a strip mall that also serves as a makeshift grocer, barber, car repair
shop, bank, post office, black market, credit agency, and community center.
Locals have names, but in such down-on-their-luck places nicknames proliferate:
Pirate, Psycho, Bank, or just plain "Someone."
Britt-Marie is there because she's 63-years-old and has just
left her husband, Kent, a self-styled "entrepreneur" who spends more
time contemplating deals with "the Germans" than paying attention to
her. Britt-Marie needs to be needed, but it's been years since Kent appreciated
that, and she worries she will die without anyone every having known she
existed. So it's off to an employment agency that sends her to Borg, to be the
temporary caretaker of a community center slated for budget-cut closure right
after the Christmas holiday. Never mind that Britt-Marie hasn't held a formal
job since her youth, that her skills center mostly on cleaning, that that she
believes a person's character cam be discerned from how he or she organizes
their cutlery drawers, that she talks to a rat, or that she is sorely lacking in
anything resembling people skills. Oddly, though, the children of Borg are
drawn to her, as is a local police officer, Sven. Against all odds, Britt-Marie
becomes immersed in the kids' soccer skirmishes, though she hasn't the
slightest interest or knowledge of the game, and is appalled by untidy uniforms.
("Skirmish" is the best word for how these blue-collar throwaways
play!)
As it transpires, Britt-Marie isn't the only one with offbeat
ideas about human nature; most of the locals think you can tell all you need to
know from which English football team a person supports. (Manchester United
wins so much that its fans think both the team and they deserve to triumph
continually. Liverpool supporters are the great middle: people who neither
dazzle nor disappoint in big way. Aston Villa followers are just perverse!)
That Britt-Marie should find herself the center of soccer madness is unexpected,
unorthodox, and affecting. As in A Man
Called Ove, Backman's soccer ball of circumstances careens over improbable
turf, and when we least expect it, it poignantly rises and smacks us in the
forehead. Okay—forced analogy. Guilty! But the point is that we, as readers,
end up caring about characters that we'd otherwise ignore, just as we'd
normally lock the car doors and made haste through towns like Borg. Above all,
we care about how Britt-Marie resolves her own late-life existential crisis.
Britt-Marie Was Here is
ultimately about the search for grace in its various guises. It is a deeply
satisfying read that is, at turns, funny, melancholic, profound, and a bit
contrived. We can forgive the small slips because Backman never stoops to pat
answers and leaves us with just enough ambiguity to feel hopeful, but slightly
unsure that we should. Rob
Weir
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